Review: Like Friday Night Lights, But For High School Mariachi
A documentary on Netflix follows a team of young musicians vying for competition wins in Texas.
A documentary on Netflix follows a team of young musicians vying for competition wins in Texas.
WWII correspondent William L. Shirer's The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich comes to life in this Netflix docuseries.
The decades-old regulation imposes burdens that no other media outlets are subject to.
George Coulam didn't just create the Texas Renaissance Festival. He built a utopia and crowned himself king.
Technology is neither inherently good or bad. Our friendbots—and our murderbots—are what we make of them.
The state is almost completely absent in 'The Decameron. The characters don't exactly handle this responsibility well.
Much like in nuclear war, there’s no way to win when both sides have dragons.
An aging comedian wrestles with woke campus culture in the new season of the Max series.
Staying true to the game, producers of the Amazon show even leave room for side quests and open-ended exploration.
The creator of Masameer County was charged with promoting homosexuality and terrorism for his South Park-style satirical cartoon.
First-place finishes include an investigative piece on egregious misconduct in federal prison, a documentary on homelessness, best magazine columnist, and more.
A new Netflix documentary series shows what happened when inmates were free to roam the cellblock with no guards in sight.
In Netflix's Pluto, a serial killer targets the world’s most advanced robots.
The long-running satirical show turns its animated sights on AI and ChatGPT.
It took a lot of work to clear this quiz show milestone.
Private unions have every right to exist, but that doesn't mean they're actually beneficial on net.
When does a sufficiently advanced algorithm start to mimic our conception of God?
We've seen this saga so many times before.
The protagonist's adversaries eventually embrace modernity.
One viewer said it should be illegal to take the Lord's name in vain on TV—and that was one of the more coherent complaints.
The anime Mashle: Magic and Muscles offers an absurdist metaphor for politically driven discrimination.
From struggle sessions to cancel culture, the story depicts the terrors of surveillance authoritarianism.
The former RNC chair's concession that Biden won "fair and square" did not save her from internal outrage at her support for Trump's stolen-election fantasy.
While the state senate's bill would cap tax credits at 2.3 percent of the state's budget, any production filming at a big enough studio would be exempt.
They should keep in mind that Jen Psaki exists.
A just-good-enough remake fails to live up to its predecessor.
Will Sheriff Roy Tillman replace Ron Swanson as TV's most notable libertarian character? Hopefully not.
What if Russia had landed on the moon before the United States?
The pirates in Our Flag Means Death end up more interested in skirting imperial powers than in plundering.
In Squid Game: The Challenge, contestants don't really risk their lives.
The credit "is at best a break-even proposition and more likely a net cost" for the state.
When he's on his game, he's still one of the best bullshit detectors in the media.
The American Buffalo documentary charts the fall and rise of American bison.
The credits cost the state over $1.3 billion per year with a 19 percent return on investment. Lawmakers' proposals will do little to change that.
Big Vape presents differing views on the supposed youth vaping epidemic.
Hasan Minhaj’s stand-up tests the boundaries of fact and fiction.
Hasan Minhaj’s stand-up tests the boundaries of fact and fiction.
In the second season of his eponymous Marvel series, Loki becomes both more human and more godlike.
The government abuse that precipitated Native American social woes is not directly discussed in Reservation Dogs.
John Stossel and the English actress discuss their shared problem—and why they'd like to destigmatize stuttering.
Attack on Titan is ultimately an anime about what it means to be free.
State power and oppressive surveillance serve as the backdrop for this animated spy comedy.
The program generates just 19 cents for every dollar spent.
In today's innovative economy, there's no excuse for sending a gift card. The staff at Reason is here with some inspiration.
Friday A/V Club: He wasn't really the character created by the late Norman Lear. But the advertisers did all they could to obscure that.
Killing It mocks capitalism, but at least it's funny.